31July2003 - We're back. I posted some
photos from the trip to Yosemite. [Yosemite weather.]
Pics of Cathedral Lakes [elevation: 9600-feet]
are posted
here. Sights encountered along the trail are posted
here. I'll try to post some more photos over the weekend. All the
plastic water bottles are crushed after returning to sea
level from the high
elevation.

18July2003 - Checking in before heading
back out (on vacation). I'll get to the mail when we return. I probably
should configure an auto-responder that says I'm
on vacation .. if I could figure out how to make that feature
work. The in-box looks pretty ugly, but I'll get to them all, eventually.

Been having philosophical discussions about the ethics of "telling
the truth". Personally, I don't believe many (any?) people speak
"the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth" ALL
THE TIME. At one end of the
Bell curve distribution for honesty, we have the likes of Jesus,
Gandhi,
Buddha, and the Dalai
Lama. At the other end, we have the likes of Ted
Bundy, Stalin,
the IRS and lawyers. The rest of us are lumped somewhere between
these two extremes.

Without getting into semantics, I think people bend the truth to suit
their needs. Some bend it more than others. [Can I get an amen, somebody?]
Quite frankly, I'm suspicious of anyone who claims to tell the truth
all the time. That's almost as bad as the world's biggest lie: The
check is in the mail.

To support my point, I quoted numerous sources, such as the Hindu epic
poem, The Mahabharata,
which says: "A falsehood uttered for the sake of a righteous
end ceases to be a falsehood." Hey, I'm no Hindu, but the
the world's longest poem makes my point.

Allow me to offer the Rad translation: "If your girl asks
how you like her new haircut, say you love it, even if you don't."
That's probably all I can say without getting into more trouble. At
least I'm honest enough to admit I bend the truth.

Concerning the site, I changed the size of the font on the PDF's for
the following four guides: ASPI
layer drivers [7-pages], FDISK
partitioning [10-pages], Norton
Ghost [25-pages] and Ripping
& Encoding CD Audio [18-pages]. Most of the
site's popular guides are featured in both downloadable
PDF versions [zipped
for faster downloads] and printer-friendly PDF's [with
gray backgrounds removed to conserve your toner/ink].

The PDF's also keep the site from getting too busy, by allowing readers
to use the downloadable & printable versions without having to revisit
the site and generate unnecessary traffic.
The files have become surprisingly popular, especially the Ghost
& FDISK PDF's.

For some reason, Adobe
Acrobat, which I use to generate the PDFs, makes normal HTML fonts
appear much larger. So I changed the size of the standard text 10-point
font to 7-point, and the heading font from 18-point
to 13-point. Friends from the
land down-under helped with that. For example, the
PDF for the Ghost guide,
which used to be 40-pages, is now only 25.

Saw
Badboys
II today. Recommended. If you like action. There is one bullet-shot
that's worth the whole movie .. slow motion .. thru two glass water
jugs. Can't miss it. Best bullet shot I've ever seen .. in any movie.
Surprisingly funny flick. Made me laugh hard. Good soundtrack, too.
Was bumping in my seat. Lots of action. Had to lie down when I got home.
Woosah. Need to learn the
lyrics.

One more thing: Alex, who writes Motherboard
Monitor, is working one a slick new installer. If you're technically
competent, and would like to provide feedback [I have], drop him a line.
The file he has doesn't actually install MBM. It simply walks you thru
the process. The installer presents several options, which need to be
clear to a variety of users. Tell him Rad says 'Hey'.
Alex
is a great guy, who lives in the
Netherlands.

08July2003 - Testing. Check: one-two. Testing.
Just stopping in long enough to say 'Hey' and wash my dirty laundry
.. before heading out
again for a few more days. Hope you had yourself a nice Fourth
[US residents].

Researched absinthe
today, including its sordid history.
Before this, I knew nothing of the drink. First heard it mentioned while
watching the film Moulin
Rouge. I know it's not technically-related, but man does not live
by Mega-Hertz
alone.

In keeping with this [sordid] theme, I also made a pot of puttanesca,
which supposedly derives its name [translation: pasta of the whore]
from the fact that it's so quick and easy to make that Italian prostitutes
used to whip it up between clients. Whatever its true origins[I have my own, unprintable, ideas],
it's a snap to make and tastes great. I prefer mine over linguine with
grated parmesean & freshly chopped basil from the garden.

Now that I'm fed and have clean underwear .. it's back to the mountains.
But before I go, here's a funny
link, from Ice
Czar [Boulder, Colorado]. Look closely.

In site-related news, I broke up the ASPI
guide into two pages. It grew too big for a single-page guide. I
try to keep all pages less than 40-KB, including graphics.
According to Dr.
Jakob, most of the world still connects to the Net via a dial-up
connection and hates to wait more than 10-secs for
a page to load. For example, this page you're reading now is ~40-KB:
25-KB of HTML + 15-KB of gfx. Notice
how his site contains
hardly any gfx.

Also, Google moved up its ranking of this guide for the simple-but-popular
search term: 'ASPI'.
Traffic to it, and also Doc's FDISK
guide, have soared recently .. much of it coming from
DMOZ's list of hand-picked links. Radified is now
a million-hit-per-month site [...and growing].

01July2003 - July is here already. Where
*does* the time go? For the next week, it's going on vacation.
We'll be away for a while, trying to enjoy some of this summer. While
we're gone, I'll leave the site's front door open, so you can come in
and peruse at your leisure. Make yourself at home here. There's cold
beer in the fridge and tasty viddles on the stove.